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Kau pat: Fried rice, which you find on every menu in all restaurants. Onions, garlic, tomatoes and small cut vegetables (for example cucumbers, cabbage, carrots) are fried in a wok, together with already cooked rice – with a choice of pork (mu), beef (nua wua) or chicken (gai). Coriander and chilli sauce on top – that's it!
Kau pat prik: Fried rice as well, but prepared with pork, which has been fried together with curry paste. Eggs, which are seasoned with pepper, are mixed together in the wok with the meat, vegetables and rice.
Pat thai: Fried noodles Thai style with various ingredients such as chicken and/or shrimps, spring onions, tomatoes, bean sprouts, eggs, lime juice, a bit of sugar, chopped peanuts and chilli powder.
Gang pat: The popular Thai curry in its spicy version. Small cut chicken, beef or pork, chillies, eggplants, onions and a little garlic are cooked together with a lot of coconut milk, seasoned with coriander on top. Cooked without coconut milk it is called gang paan and is more spicy.
Gai yang: Barbecued chicken – a specialty from the northeast of Thailand. The chicken is cut open and made flat. Rubbed with pepper, chilli powder, garlic and coriander then with sweet and sour sauce added it is placed on the charcoal grill. In this way it stays crispy on the outside and very, very juicy inside. Eaten together with a spicy papaya salad (som tam) – that's it!
Satay: Small meat skewers (satay) are offered on nearly every street corner. They look and taste good but be aware: sometimes they are covered with hot chilli sauce.
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